• Seafood Watch added the American lobster, targeted by American and Canadian fisheries, to its “red list” of species to avoid this month.
  • The conservation group cites the impact of lobster traps on endangered, North Atlantic right whales.
  • In Maine, local lobstermen, the governor and more are furious over the new distinction – arguing that fishermen have worked to protect right whales for years.

YORK, Maine – Local lobstermen are furious over a recent “red list” designation by the environmental group Seafood Watch discouraging the purchase of Gulf of Maine lobster.

Seafood Watch, which collaborates with companies including Whole Foods and Cheesecake Factory to label products that harm marine life, gave the American lobster an updated red-colored “avoid” rating this month. The group cites the impact of lobster traps on North Atlantic right whales, listed as endangered both federally and internationally.

Lobstermen argue their traps are regulated in the United States to the point where they consider it unfeasible for right whales to get caught in their traps. Maine lobstermen have not had an interaction with right whales in nearly 20 years, the Maine Lobstermen’s Association said this week.

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Gov. Mills: ‘This designation is flat out wrong’

With the new listing, coming out the month of Maine Lobster Week, Maine lobstermen and officials as high in power as the governor are denouncing Seafood Watch for unfairly attacking Maine’s struggling lobster industry.

“Seafood Watch is misleading consumers and businesses with this designation,” Maine Gov. Janet Mills said in a statement Tuesday. She said generations of Maine lobstermen have worked hard to protect the sustainability of the lobster fishery and have taken unprecedented steps to protect right whales.

“Efforts that the federal government and now Seafood Watch have failed to recognize,” Mills continued. “This designation is flat out wrong.”

Mills’ opponent in the coming gubernatorial election, former governor Paul LePage, also released a statement denouncing the designation, saying as governor he would push back on federal regulatory policy “aimed at destroying the livelihoods” of Maine lobstermen.

“Now more than ever our lobster industry needs a steady, proven, ally,” LePage said.

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Seafood Watch’s ‘red list’ change; lobstermen lawsuit

Seafood Watch said they changed their designation for Gulf of Maine lobster because entanglement in fishing gear is “the leading cause of serious injury and death to North Atlantic right whales.”